Have you thoroughly checked your receipt after a stay at a hotel lately?
It may include resort fees you were unaware of when you made the decision to stay at the hotel — and the price may have been way higher than what you originally thought it would be.
According to a lawsuit filed by Washington, D.C.’s attorney general, Karl A. Racine, in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, some hotels aren’t being transparent about resort fees. And they aren’t always offering amenities like actual resorts, either!
In prepared remarks given to the press earlier this month, Racine said, “For at least the last decade, Marriott has used an unlawful trade practice called “drip pricing” in advertising its hotel rooms whereby Marriott initially hides a portion of a hotel room’s rate from consumers. Marriott calls this hidden portion of the room rate a number of terms, including a ‘resort fee,’ ‘amenity fee,’ and a ‘destination fee.'”
These fees cover things such as tennis courts, swimming pools, and golf courses. You might be paying a resort fee for simply using a hotel’s general facilities.
Isn’t that what the original price includes anyway?
Attorney General Karl A. Racine’s lawsuit against hotel giant Marriott International accuses it of price deception because of the way it lists the resort fees.
It was after an investigation by attorneys general in every state in the U.S. that Racine decided to file the lawsuit. Here’s his tweet announcing the move:
ICYMI: Last week, I sued Marriott International for charging consumers deceptive “resort fees” when booking hotel rooms.
Through these fees, Marriott hides the true price of rooms and misleads consumers to increase company profits: https://t.co/3IYIVmJ0Wy
— AG Karl A. Racine (@AGKarlRacine) July 15, 2019
And another lawsuit, filed this week by Nebraska’s Attorney General Doug Peterson, claims that Hilton Dopco. Inc. hotels do the same thing. He accused the hotel chain of not disclosing booking fees, misleading customers about what resort fees pay for, and hiding the true price of hotel rooms.
“For years, Hilton has misled consumers in Nebraska regarding the true cost of certain Hilton hotel rooms,” Peterson said in a statement. “They failed to heed warnings from the Federal Trade Commission and the mounting complaints from their own customers.”
Getty Images | William Thomas Cain
What’s happening that has everyone so upset?
The resort fees are often not disclosed in the price you see on an advertisement. The AGs don’t like that people are finding out about the resort fees after they book their rooms.
Racine said in his remarks, “By charging resort fees and by failing to clearly disclose them to consumers up front, Marriott has found a way to increase profits without appearing to raise prices. In some cases, Marriott even leads consumers to believe that resort fees are charges imposed by the government.”
So, for example, if a hotel says it is currently offering rooms for $130 a night, you might pay WAY more than that once all the fees and taxes are added. The attorneys general are watching out for consumers in asking the hotels to include the resort fees in their advertisements so everyone knows the actual cost before they commit to a purchase.